At that fall the six men scampered
from beneath the table to seize the downed man.
There was no need of their haste. Sheriff Anderson
was a wreck rather than a fighting man. One arm
was horribly crumpled beneath him; his ribs were shattered,
there was a great gash where the rung of the chair
had cut into the bone like a knife.
They stood chattering about the fallen
man, straightening him out, feeling his pulse, making
sure that he, who would soon hang at the will of the
law, was alive. Outside, voices were rushing toward
them, doors slamming.
Bull Hunter broke through the circle,
bent over the limp body, and drew a big bundle of
keys from a pocket. Then, without a word, he went
back to the far end of the room, buckled on his gun
belt, and in silence left the room.
The others paid no heed. They
and the newcomers who had poured into the room were
fascinated by the work of the giant rather than the
giant’s self. They had a lantern, swinging
dull light and grotesque shadows across the place
now, and by the illumination, two of the men went
to the wall and picked up the great oaken chair.
They raised it slowly between them, a battered mass
of disconnected wood. Then they looked to the
far end of the long table where he who had thrown the
missile had stood. Another line had been written
into the history of Bull Hunter — the first
line that was written in red.
Bull himself was on his way to the
jail. He found it unguarded. The deputy
had gone to find the cause of the commotion at the
hotel. The steel bars, moreover, were sufficient
to retain the prisoner and keep out would-be rescuers.
In the dim light of his lantern, Bull
saw that Pete Reeve was sitting cross-legged on his
bunk, like a little, dried-up idol, smoking a cigarette.
His only greeting to the big man was a lifting of the
eyebrows. But, when the big key was fitted into
the lock and the lock turned, he showed his first
signs of interest. He was standing up when Bull
opened the door and strode in.
“Have you got your things?” said Bull
curtly.
“What things, big fellow?”
“Why, guns and things — and your hat,
of course.”
Pete Reeve walked to the corner of
the cell and took a sombrero off the wall. “Here’s
that hat,” he answered, “but they ain’t
passing out guns to jailbirds — not in these
parts!”
“You ain’t a jailbird,”
answered Bull, “so we’ll get that gun.
Know where it is?”
Reeve followed without a question
through the open door, only stopping as he passed
beyond the bars, to look back to them with a shudder.
It was the first sign of emotion he had shown since
his arrest. But his step was lighter and quicker
as he followed Bull into the front room.
“In that closet, yonder,”
said Reeve, pointing to a door. “That’s
where they keep the guns.”
Bull shook out his bundle of keys
into the great palm of his hand.
“Not those keys — the
deputy has the key to the closet,” said Pete.
“I saw Anderson give it to him.”
Bull sighed. “I ain’t
got much time, partner,” he said. Approaching
the door, he examined it wistfully. “But,
maybe, they’s another way.” He drew
back a little, raised his right leg, and smashed the
heavy cowhide boot against the door. The wood
split from top to bottom, and Bull’s leg was
driven on through the aperture. He paused to wrench
the fragments of the door from lock and hinges and
then beckoned to Pete Reeve. “Look for
your gun in here, Reeve.”
The little man cast one twinkling
glance at his companion and then was instantly among
the litter of the closet floor. He emerged strapping
a belt about him, the holster tugging far down, so
that the muzzle of the gun was almost at his knee.
Bull appreciated the diminutive size of the man for
the first time, seeing him in conjunction with the
big gun on his thigh.
There was an odd change in the little
man also, the moment his gun was in place. He
tugged his broad-brimmed hat a little lower across
his eyes and poised himself, as if on tiptoe; his
glance was a constant flicker about the room until
it came to rest on Bull. “Suppose you lemme
in on the meaning of all this. Who are you and
where do you figure on letting me loose? What
in thunder is it all about?”
“We’ll talk later. Now you got to
get started.”
Bull waved to the door. Pete
Reeve darted past him with noiseless steps and paused
a moment at the threshold of the jail. Plainly
he was ready for fight or flight, and his right hand
was toying constantly with the holstered butt of his
gun. Bull followed to the outside.
“Hosses?” asked the little man curtly.
“On foot,” answered Bull
with equal brevity, and he led the way straight across
the street. There was no danger of being seen.
All the life of the town was drawn to a center about
the hotel. Lights were flashing behind its windows,
men were constantly pounding across the veranda, running
in and out. Bull led the way past the building
and cut for the cottonwoods.
“And now?” demanded Pete Reeve. “Now,
partner?”
That word stung Bull. It had
not been applied to him more than a half a dozen times
in his life, together with its implications of free
and equal brotherhood. To be called partner by
the great man who had conquered terrible Uncle Bill
Campbell!
“They’s a mess in the
hotel,” said Bull, explaining as shortly as he
could. “Seems that Sheriff Anderson was
the gent that done the killing of Armstrong.
It got found out and the sheriff tried to get away.
Lots of noise and trouble.”
“Ah,” said Reeve, “it
was him, then — the old hound! I might
have knowed! But I kep’ on figuring that
they was two of ’em! Well, the sheriff
was a handy boy with his gun. Did he drop anybody
before they got him? I heard two guns go off
like one. Them must of been the sheriff’s
cannons.”
“They was,” said Bull,
“but them bullets didn’t hit nothing but
wood.”
“Wild, eh? Shot into the wall?”
“Nope. Into a chair.”
The little man was struggling and
panting sometimes breaking into a trot to keep up
with the immense strides of his companion. “A
chair? You don’t say so!”
Bull was silent.
“How come he shot at a chair? Drunk?”
“The chair was sailing through the air at him.”
“H’m!” returned
Pete Reeve. “Somebody throwed a chair at
him, and the sheriff got rattled and shot at it instead
of dodging? Well, I’ve seen a pile of funnier
things than that happen in gun play, off and on.
Who threw the chair?”
“I did.”
“You?” He squinted up
at the lofty form of Bull Hunter. “What
name did you say?” he asked gently.
“Hunter is my name. Mostly they call me
Bull.”
“You got the size for that name,
partner. So you cleaned up the sheriff with a
chair?” he sighed. “I wish I’d
been there to see it. But who got the inside
on the sheriff?”
“I dunno what you mean?”
Pete Reeve looked closely at his companion.
Plainly he was bewildered, somewhere between a smile
and a frown.
“I mean who found out that the sheriff done
it?”
“He told it himself,” said Bull.
“Drunk, en?”
“Nope. Not drunk. He was asked if
he didn’t do the murder.”
“Great guns! Who asked him?”
“I done it,” said Bull as simply as ever.
Reeve bit his lip. He had just
put Bull down as a simple-minded hulk.
He was forced to revise his opinion.
“You done that? You follered him up, eh?”
“I just done a little thinking. So I asked
him.”
Reeve shook his head. “Maybe you hypnotized
him,” he suggested.
“Nope. I just asked him.
I got a lot of folks sitting around, and then I began
telling the sheriff how he done the shooting.”
“And he admitted it?”
“Nope. He jumped for a gun.”
“And then you heaved a chair
at him.” Pete Reeve drew in a long breath.
“But what reason did you have, son? I got
to ask you that before I thank you the way I want
to thank you. But, before you kick out, you’ll
find that Pete Reeve is a friend.”
“My reason was,” said
Bull, “that I had business to do with you that
couldn’t be done in a jail. So I had to
get you out.”
“And now where’re we headed?”
“Where we can do that business.”
They had reached a broad break in
the cottonwoods; the moonlight was falling so softly
and brightly.
Bull paused and looked around him.
“I guess this’ll have to do,” he
declared.
“All right, son. You can
be as mysterious as you want. Now what you got
me here for?”
“To kill you,” said Bull gently.
Pete Reeve flinched back. Then
he tapped his holster, made sure of the gun, became
more easy. “That’s interesting,”
he announced. “You couldn’t wait
for the law to hang me, eh?”
Bull began explaining laboriously.
He pushed back his hat and began to count off his
points into the palm of one hand. “You shot
up Uncle Bill Campbell,” he explained.
“It ain’t that I got any grudge agin’
you for that, but you see, Uncle Bill took me in young
and give me a home all these years. I thought
it would sort of pay him back if I run you down.
So I walked across the mountains and come after you.”
“Wait!” exclaimed Pete Reeve. “You
walked?”
“Yep,” he went on, heedless
of the fact that Pete Reeve was peering earnestly
into the face of his companion, now puckered with the
earnest frown of thought. “I come down hoping
to get you and kill you. Besides, that wouldn’t
only pay back Uncle Bill. It would make him think
that I was a man. You see, Reeve, I ain’t
quick thinking, and I ain’t bright. I ain’t
got a quick tongue and sharp eyes, and they been treating
me like I was a kid all my life. So I got to do
something. I got to! I ain’t got anything
agin’ you, but you just happen to be the one
that I got to fight. Stand over yonder by that
stump. I’ll stand here, and we’ll
fight fair and square.”
Pete Reeve obeyed, his movements slow,
as if they were the result of hypnotism. “Bull,”
he said rather faintly, looking at the towering bulk
of his opponent, “I dunno. Maybe I’m
going nutty. But I figure that you come down
here to kill me for the sake of getting your uncle
to pat you on the back once or twice. And you
find you can’t get at me because I’m in
jail, so you work out a murder mystery to get me out,
and then you tackle me. You say you ain’t
very bright. I dunno. Maybe you ain’t
bright, but you’re mighty different!”
He paused and rubbed his forehead.
“Son, I’ve seen pretty good men in my
day, but I ain’t never seen one that I cotton
to like I do to you. You’ve saved my life.
How can you figure on me going out and taking yours,
now?”
“You ain’t going to, maybe,”
said Bull calmly. “Maybe I’ll get
to you.”
“Son,” answered the other
almost sadly, shaking his head, “when I’m
right, with a good, steady nerve, they ain’t
any man in the world that can sling a gun with me.
And tonight I’m right. If it comes to a
showdown — but are you pretty good with a
gun yourself, Bull?”
“No,” answered Bull frankly.
“I ain’t any good compared to an expert
like you. But I’m good enough to take a
chance.”
“Them sort of chances ain’t taken twice,
Bull!”
“You see,” said Bull,
“I’m going to make a rush as I pull the
gun, and if I get to you before I’m dead, well — all
I ask is to lay my hands on you, you see?”
The little man shuddered and blinked.
“I see,” he said, and swallowed with difficulty.
“But, in the name of reason, Bull, have sense!
Lemme talk! I’ll tell you what that uncle
of yours was — ”
“Don’t talk!” exclaimed
Bull Hunter. “I sort of like you, partner,
and it sort of breaks me down to hear you talk.
Don’t talk, but listen. The next time that
frog croaks we go for our guns, eh? That frog
off in the marsh!”
He had hardly spoken before the ominous
sound was heard, and Bull reached for his gun.
For all his bulk of hand and unwieldy arms, the gun
came smoothly, swiftly into his hand. He would
have had an ordinary man covered, long before the
latter had his gun muzzle-clear of the leather.
But Pete Reeve was no ordinary man. His arm jerked
down; his fingers flickered down and up. They
went down empty; they came up with the burden of a
long revolver, shining in the moonlight, and he fired
before Bull’s gun came to the level for a shot.
Only Pete Reeve knew the marvel of
his own shooting this day. He had sworn a solemn
and silent oath that he would not kill this faithful,
courageous fellow from the mountains. He could
have planted a bullet where the life lay, at any instant
of the fight. But he fired for another purpose.
The moment Bull reached for his weapon he had lurched
forward, aiming to shoot as he ran. Pete Reeve
set himself a double goal. His first intention
was to disarm the giant; the other was to stop his
rush. For, once within the grip of those big fingers,
his life would be squeezed out like the juice of an
orange.
His task was doubly difficult in the
moonlight. But the first shot went home nicely,
aimed as exactly as a scientist finds a spot with
his instruments. Where the moon’s rays splashed
across the bare right forearm of Bull, he sent a bullet
that slashed through the great muscles. The revolver
dropped from the nerveless hand of the giant, but
Bull never paused. On he came, empty-handed, but
with power of death, as the little man well knew,
in the fingers of his extended left hand. He
came with a snarl, a savage intake of breath, as he
felt the hot slash of Pete’s bullet. But
Reeve, standing erect like some duelist of old, his
left hand tucked into the hollow of his back, took
the great gambling chance and refused to shoot to kill.
He placed his second shot more effectively,
for this time he must stop that tremendous body, advancing
upon him. He found one critical spot. Between
the knee and the thigh, halfway up on the inside of
the left leg, he drove that second bullet with the
precision of a surgeon. The leg crumpled under
Bull and sent him pitching forward on his face.
Perhaps the marsh ground was unstable,
but it seemed to Pete Reeve that the very earth quaked
beneath his feet as the big man fell. He swung
his gun wide and leaned to see how serious was the
damage he had done. Bleeding would be the greater
danger.
But that fraction of a second brought
him into another peril. The giant heaved up on
his sound right leg and his sound left arm, and flung
himself forward, two limbs dangling uselessly.
With a hideously contorted face, Bull swung his left
arm in a wide circle for a grip and scooped in Pete
Reeve, as the latter sprang back with a cry of horror.
The action swept Pete in and crushed
his gun hand and arm against the body of his assailant,
paralyzing his only power of attack or defense.
Reeve was carried down to the ground as if beneath
the bulk of a mountain. There was no question
of sparing life now. Pete Reeve began to fight
for life. He wrestled at his gun to tug it free,
but found it anchored. He pulled the trigger,
and the gun spoke loud and clear, but the bullet plunged
into empty space. Then he felt that left arm begin
to move, and the hand worked up behind his back like
a great spider.
Higher it rose, and the huge, thick
fingers reached up and around his throat, fumbling
to get at the windpipe. Pete Reeve made his last
effort; it was like striving to free himself from a
ton’s weight. Hysteria of fear and horror
seized him, and his voice gave utterance to his terror.
As he screamed, the big fingers joined around his
throat. Any further pressure would end him!
He looked up into the glaring eyes
and the contorted face of the giant; the rasping,
panting breathing paralyzed his senses. There
was a slight inward contraction of the grip; then
it ceased.
Miraculously he felt the great hand
relax and fall away. The bulk was heaved away
from him, and staggering to his own feet, he saw Bull
Hunter supported against a tree, one leg useless, one
arm streaming.
“I couldn’t seem to do
it,” said Bull Hunter thickly. “I
couldn’t noways seem to do it, Reeve. You
see, I sort of like you, and I couldn’t kill
you, Pete.”
When Pete Reeve recovered from his
astonishment he said, “You can do more.
You can go home and tell that infernal hound of an
uncle of yours that you had the life of Pete Reeve
under your fingertips and that you didn’t take
it. It’s the second time I’ve owed
my life, and both times in one day, and both times
to one man. You tell your uncle that!”
The big man sagged still more against
the tree. “I’ll never go home, Pete,
unless ghosts walk; and I’ll never tell Uncle
Bill anything, unless the ghosts talk. I’m
dying pretty pronto, I think, Pete.”
“Dyin’? You ain’t hurt bad,
Bull!”
“It’s the bleeding; all
the senses is running out of my head — like
water — and the moon — is turning
black — and — ” He slumped
down at the foot of the tree.